Friday, January 7, 2011

Katz: UK Can Win SEC and Contend for Final Four Without Kanter


Andy Katz of ESPN.com says Kentucky can still win the Southeastern Conference and contend for the Final Four without Enes Kanter on the roster.

Katz points out that UK senior Josh Harrellson is filling in adequately for the Wildcats.

Here is an excerpt:

“With what they do offensively,’’ Leibovitz said. “Having a big that makes layups goes a long way.’’

Kanter could do that and more in the post. But Harrellson, though not a traditional low-block player, has proven himself more than serviceable for a team that relies heavily on perimeter players like Brandon Knight (18.3 ppg) and Doron Lamb (14.1 ppg) offensively as well as slashing forward Terrence Jones (17.1 ppg, 9.1 rpg).

“We had our hands full with them and we couldn’t keep them off the backboard,’’ said Notre Dame coach Mike Brey, whose Irish were outrebounded 40-33 in a 72-58 loss to the Wildcats on Dec. 8 in the SEC-Big East Invitational in Louisville. Harrellson had nine boards in that game.

“I’m really impressed with Harrellson and what he’s doing for them,’’ Brey said Friday. “He’s playing his role. They’ve all gotten better. They’re a young team, which is getting reps. I thought they’d be young when we played them but they’re playing older and getting better and better.’’

Complete Article

Bowling Green to Host State Farm High School Shootout


Bowling Green will host the State Farm High School Shootout tomorrow at the Bowling Green High School Arena.

The event will feature some quality teams and will be highlighted with the nightcap battle between Louisville Male and Bowling Green.

State Farm High School Shootout Schedule:

3:30 pm Grayson County vs Russellville
5:00 pm Henderson County vs South Warren
6:30 pm Trotwood Madison, Dayton, OH vs Louisville Eastern
8:00 pm Louisville Male vs Bowling Green

Rondo on Pace to Start in the NBA All-Star Game


If voting ended today, former Kentucky point guard Rajon Rondo would be a starter in the NBA All-Star Game.

Rondo has 929,781 votes, which is second to Dwyane Wade among Eastern Conference guards.

The starters right now would be Rondo, Wade, LeBron James, Kevin Garnett and Dwight Howard.

Voting takes place until January 27, when the All-Star starters will be announced. The 2011 NBA All-Star Game will be played on February 20.

Rookie John Wall is fifth in the Eastern Conference voting with 212,238 total votes.

Murray State Basketball Alumni Invited to Reunion


Murray State Athletics is inviting all Racer basketball alumni, including former players, coaches and managers back to campus for a reunion on Saturday, Jan. 22, 2011.

This group of alumni has, without a doubt, contributed to the proudest tradition and richest history in OVC basketball.

On this special day, Racer Athletics will say ‘thanks’ and start a new tradition with the Murray State Basketball – Racer Reunion. Plans include an 11:30 a.m. luncheon (in the Murray Room at the CFSB Center) with remarks by Coach Billy Kennedy and a special video. Plus a tour of the current facilities and a look at what is planned for the future. Attendees are inviited to go to the Racers' afternoon shoot-around and then the game against Southeast Missouri State that evening at 7:30 p.m.

Former players, coaches, managers and staff are asked to complete and return a reservation form by Wednesday, Jan. 19.

Former players are also encouraged to contact other teammates about the reunion and direct them to this site for reservation information.

CLICK HERE FOR RESERVATION FORM

Racer Athletics plans for this event to become a tradition as great as the success the basketball teams have enjoyed over the years.

Additional information may also be obtained by contacting Paul Bubb, Associate Athletic Director, at 270-809-3369.

SCHEDULE

Saturday, January 22

11:30 a.m. Lunch & Program (Murray Room, CFSB Center)
1:30 p.m. Team Shoot-Around (CFSB Center)
2:30 p.m. Facility Tour
7:30 p.m. Racers vs. Southeast Missouri State University

* Article by Murray State University

UK President Lee Todd Comments on Kanter Decision


University of Kentucky President Lee Todd has issued a statement regarding the NCAA's decision on Enes Kanter:

“I’m very disappointed in what appears to me to be an inconsistent decision that leaves an outstanding young man without any recourse. It’s very disappointing that this young man, who along with his family intended to do everything the right way and in compliance with the rules, won’t be able to pursue his dream of playing at UK and in intercollegiate athletics. As an NCAA board member, I continue to be puzzled and confused by the reasoning behind this decision, which seems to be an inconsistent and arbitrary application of the rules. It is unfortunate and disappointing that Enes and his family have been negatively impacted by this process. It is certainly a matter I will continue to try to understand and question in my remaining time on the board as part of an organization, whose stated purpose is to put families and student athletes first.”

- Lee T. Todd, Jr

John Calipari Issues Statement on Kanter Ruling


The University of Kentucky has released the following statement from John Calipari in regards to the NCAA ruling on Enes Kanter:

"We are obviously disappointed in this decision and find it unfortunate that a group of adults would come to such a decision regarding the future of an 18-year-old young man.

"This has never been about our program or the University of Kentucky, it has been about the wishes of Enes and his family to have their son educated in the United States. It is a shame that Enes had to endure the constant speculation and misinformation that was furthered by certain media organizations in the smear campaign conducted by his Turkish team.

"The silver lining is that Enes will always be part of this team. My job will be to prepare him for his entry into the NBA Draft, which this decision by the Association will likely necessitate. Enes will always be a part of our family and I plan to be by his side in the green room whenever he is drafted."

Kanter will now serve as an undergraduate student-assistant for the Wildcats.

UK Athletics Director Mitch Barnhart had this to say:

"We are disappointed in the result and equally disappointed in the process. We have spent significant effort and resources to help this young man play college basketball in the United States. This has been on our radar screen daily for 10 months.

"We were informed by the NCAA that the flexible decisions made by the NCAA staff in other high-profile cases could not be used in case precedent and were not binding on the NCAA going forward. The University of Kentucky was very hopeful that our student-athlete might receive the same type of consideration afforded to these other athletes but that did not happen. We were also reminded on a regular basis that the amateurism and professionalism piece, including benefits received from a professional team, is the one area of Bylaw 12 that has not been deregulated."

Enes Kanter Has Been Ruled Ineligible at Kentucky...Again


Kentucky freshman Enes Kanter has been ruled ineligible to participate in college athletics at Kentucky.

SethDavisHoops BREAKING: Appeals committee upholds NCAA's decision to rule Enes Kanter permanently ineligible. Release issued shortly

Here is the release in its entirety from the NCAA:

Kanter Ruled Permanently Ineligible

For Immediate Release

Friday, January 7, 2011

INDIANAPOLIS ---University of Kentucky men’s basketball student-athlete Enes Kanter has been ruled permanently ineligible for receiving impermissible compensation from a professional team.

The NCAA Student-Athlete Reinstatement Committee has upheld the NCAA staff decision that Kanter received $33,033 above his actual and necessary expenses for one year while playing for a club basketball team in Turkey.

The reinstatement committee is the final appeal opportunity. The independent committee is composed of representatives from NCAA member colleges, universities and athletic conferences. It can reduce or remove the conditions but cannot increase the conditions imposed by the staff.

As a result of the ruling, Kanter will not be allowed to compete, practice or travel with the team as a player, but is able to receive financial aid to continue his education at Kentucky. The university has indicated it plans to designate Kanter as an undergraduate student-assistant coach. In this capacity, Kanter could perform limited coaching duties with the team.

Actual and necessary expenses are defined by NCAA rules and generally relate to a player’s expenses directly necessary for practice and competition on a team. Some examples include meals and lodging directly tied to practice or competition, coaching, medical insurance and transportation tied to practice or competition.

Kanter played three seasons with the Turkish sport club Fenerbahce from 2006-07 to 2008-09. Although he competed primarily for the club’s under-18 junior team, he did compete on the club’s senior team in 2008-09. According to facts agreed to by the university and the NCAA Eligibility Center, Kanter received $33,033 more than his actual expenses for the 2008-09 season.

Although a recent NCAA rule change allows prospective student-athletes to compete on teams with professionals while maintaining their amateur status before college enrollment, the membership maintained the longstanding rule that receipt of money above actual and necessary expenses from a professional team is a violation and defines the individual as a professional under NCAA legislation. That was the case here.

Kanter was initially ruled ineligible Nov. 11 by the NCAA reinstatement staff. Before reaching its decision, the reinstatement staff considered a number of factors, including: the nature and seriousness of the violation; any impermissible benefits received; the student-athlete’s level of responsibility; any mitigating factors presented by the university; applicable NCAA guidelines; and any relevant case precedent.

The original staff decision was upheld by the reinstatement committee on Dec 2.

On Dec. 8, the university asked for and was granted reconsideration of its case based upon new information. This is in keeping with NCAA policy allowing schools a second opportunity to state their case should new information become available.

The new information did not change the original statement of facts that had been agreed to by the university and the NCAA prior to the start of the reinstatement process.

After considering the new information, the reinstatement staff once again ruled Kanter permanently ineligible Dec 10. In response to the staff decision, the university chose to appeal a second time to the reinstatement committee. Kentucky’s appeal was heard on Jan. 6 and the school was informed on Jan. 7 of the committee’s decision.

“While unfortunate for Enes and the University of Kentucky, the final decision of the reinstatement committee is completely compatible with the collegiate model of sports our members have developed, since he received a significant amount of money, above his actual expenses from a professional team prior to coming to college,” said Kevin Lennon, NCAA vice president of academic and membership affairs.

Summary of timeline

Kanter moved to the United States in 2009 and attended a prep high school before enrolling at Kentucky in the fall of 2010.

The NCAA Eligibility Center staff first contacted Kentucky in March 2010 and Enes Kanter directly on March 24, 2010, with questions about his involvement with a Turkish professional basketball team. From the beginning and throughout the process, the university and the NCAA conducted multiple interviews and compiled documentation pertinent to the case.

In June, the NCAA staff provided Kentucky and Kanter with information it received indicating Kanter received benefits from the Turkish team. In August, Kanter and his father acknowledged receiving those benefits. From August to mid-October, NCAA staff assisted Kentucky as it pursued factual and interpretive appeals.

On Oct. 25, Kentucky agreed to the statement of facts in the case and on Oct. 27 asked the student-athlete reinstatement staff to rule on his eligibility. The staff, after an initial review, asked for more information on Nov. 1. Kentucky responded on Nov. 4 and 8, and the NCAA reinstatement staff made its decision on Nov. 11. Under NCAA student-athlete reinstatement guidelines Kanter was allowed to practice but not compete or travel with the team during the appeal process.

On Dec. 1, the NCAA Student-Athlete Reinstatement Committee heard the first appeal.

On Dec. 2, the committee notified the NCAA reinstatement staff it had upheld its decision of permanent ineligibility. NCAA staff then notified the University of Kentucky. During the notification call, the university indicated it had new information and requested a reconsideration.

On Dec. 8, the university forwarded its case based upon the new information to the NCAA reinstatement staff.

On Dec. 10, the NCAA reinstatement staff upheld its initial ruling of permanent ineligibility.

On Dec. 20, the university notified the NCAA it planned to appeal the second staff decision.

On Jan. 6, the reinstatement committee heard the school’s appeal before rendering its decision.

On Jan. 7, the University of Kentucky was notified that its appeal had been denied.

Kanter Announcement Possible In the Next Hour



Seth Davis has stated on Twitter that the Enes Kanter decision may be announced within the hour.

SethDavisHoops Sounding more and more like Kanter announcement will come within the hour. It's all over but the shoutin folks.

In other words, it's time to hit refresh like crazy and cross your fingers. The news isn't sounding great for Kentucky and Kanter.

Parrish Picks Georgia Over UK as His Guaranteed Upset


Gary Parrish of CBSSports.com picks the Georgia Bulldogs to upset Kentucky tomorrow afternoon.

Here is his analysis of the game:

Yet another interesting matchup: You might think UConn's Kemba Walker is taking a higher percentage of his team's shots while he's on the court than any other player from a BCS-affiliated league, but you'd be wrong to think that because it's not true. Walker takes 34.5 percent of UConn's shots while on the floor. Slightly ahead of him is Trey Thompkins, who is taking 34.9 percent of Georgia's shots while on the floor. That the 6-foot-9 forward is making 51.4 percent of said shots is a big reason why the Bulldogs have an eight-game winning streak heading into Saturday's home game against No. 10 Kentucky. A ninth straight win could launch the Bulldogs into the Top 25 (and one).

And his guaranteed upset of the week:

Guaranteed to be an upset: Can I spend one weekend labeling Kentucky a serious Final Four contender and the next picking the Wildcats to lose to an unranked opponent like Georgia? Of course I can. Why? Because I'm crazy, that's why!

Complete Article

Video: Dunk Highlights from Former Card Alhaji Mohammed

Former Louisville guard Alhaji Mohammed is playing at a high level in Spain's LEB Gold league. Mohammed, who plays for Lleida, is averaging 15.3 points, 4.3 rebounds and 2.3 assists in 17 games this season.

Mohammed makes the dunk highlights in Spain:

Prayers for Billy Gillispie and Family



Kent Spencer just passed along on Twitter that former Kentucky head coach Billy Gillispie has lost his mother.

I would like to ask all readers and followers to extend a prayer to Billy and the Gillispie family.

John Calipari Says UK Will Support Kanter Family in Whatever They Choose To Do


When asked about the Enes Kanter case at today's media outing, John Calipari turned to UK spokesman DeWayne Peevy.

Peevy responded with, "We don't comment on that."

Calipari did say the University of Kentucky would support the Kanter family if a decision were made to take legal action against the NCAA.

"I'm not worried about that, this is about that young man," Calipari stated. "So whatever they choose to do as a family, we'll support."

Video of Calipari Talking (from John Clay of the Herald-Leader):


Enes Kanter Decision Expected as Soon as Today


Seth Davis of Sports Illustrated says the University of Kentucky is braced to find out the result of the Enes Kanter eligibility case as soon as today.

Davis adds that there is little optimism about the outcome being in Kanter's favor.

Here are Davis' posts from Twitter:

SethDavisHoops Source indicates UK is braced to hear ruling on Kanter's appeal as early as today, by Monday at latest. Appeal heard via teleconf yesterday.

SethDavisHoops Everyone is guessing at this point, but it's clear Kentucky is not optimistic about Kanter's prospects. Neither am I. There's always hope.

NOTE: There is a media opportunity with John Calipari today which has spawned speculation that he might announce something Kanter-related, BUT it is expected that this is just the typical pregame media meeting.

Murray State Defeats TSU for 25th Straight at Home


Murray State 64
Tennessee State 53

Final from Murray, Kentucky

The Murray State Racers rolled to their 25th straight home win Thursday with a 64-53 victory over Tennessee State at the CFSB Center in Murray, Ky., as MSU upped their record in the Ohio Valley Conference to 3-1 and 10-4 overall.

Donte Poole came off the bench to match his career high with 16 points on 4-of-4 shooting from three-point range and was 6-of-7 overall from the field. Isacc Miles added 12 points and a game-high four steals.

MSU jumped to a 23-13 lead when Miles got a steal and hit Jewuan Long for a layup with 5:12 before half.

MSU pushed to their biggest lead of the half with 1.3 seconds left on a pair of free throws from Jeffery McClain and MSU led 37-21 at the break.

The Racers broke the game open with a 10-3 run in the second half when Shawn Jackson and Poole led the charge for a 59-37 lead with 4:24 remaining.

MSU held the Tigers to only nine field goals in the first half and 38 percent shooting for the game, while hitting 50 percent of their own shots. MSU won the battle of the boards 32-24 and has 12 rebounds on the offensive end.

The Racers held TSU, a hot shooting team coming in, to five three-point baskets after they hit 12 against Memphis last weekend.

Complete Recap

No. 4 Bellarmine Takes Down Drury in GLVC Action


(4) Bellarmine 75
Drury 65

Final from Louisville, Kentucky

LOUISVILLE, Ky.--The No. 4 Bellarmine Knights shut down the Drury Panthers over the last two and half minutes to score the game's final nine points and pull out a 85-75 victory in a hard-fought Great Lakes Valley Conference game in Knights Hall on Thursday night.

After trailing at halftime 38-31, Bellarmine re-asserted themselves quickly in the second period and tied the game at 41 as Justin Benedetti converted an old-fashioned 3-point play just 3:04 into the second stanza. From that point on, the game was tightly contested until the Knights pulled away at the end.

"Our late game execution was phenomenal because we kept attacking and kept passing," Bellarmine Coach Scott Davenport said. "It's tough to single anybody out tonight, because if you're going to do that you're going to need two sheets of paper, because you have to talk about them all."

In terms of point production, Jeremy Kendle led the way with 19 points, and he was joined in double figures by Braydon Hobbs (16), Nick Holmes (14) and Chris Dowe (12).

It Hobbs, however, who made the big plays coming down the stretch. In the final two and a half minutes The New Albany junior drained a 3-pointer to put the Knights up by five, dished off an assist on another three point play, blocked a shot, made a steal, and induced a traveling violation.
The Knights (12-1, 5-0 GLVC) had a cold-shooting first half, making just 11 of 34 attempts for 32.4 percent. The home team heated up in the final period, however, and made 18 of 29 second half shots to shoot 62 percent in the half and finish the game at a respectable 46 percent.

Complete Recap

Resurgent DeMarcus Cousins Continues to Play Well


Former Kentucky star DeMarcus Cousins is having the best streak of his young NBA career. Cousins has scored at least 20 points in three consecutive games and four of the last five.

The Sacramento center is now averaging 12.7 points and 7.6 rebounds per game on the season and his averages are on the rise.

In last night's 122-102 victory over Denver, Cousins scored 20 points and pulled down 6 rebounds. He was 7-12 from the field.

Since December 29, Cousins is 44-80 from the field and is averaging an eye-opening 21.8 points and 9.0 rebounds.

Here is Cousins doing work in last night's game:


Denver Holds Off Late Western Kentucky Charge


Denver 62
Western Kentucky 59

Final from Bowling Green, Kentucky

BOWLING GREEN, Ky. — WKU stormed back from 18 points down to bring the game within two in the final minute of the game, but Denver hit its free throws down the stretch to seal a three-point Sun Belt Conference win Thursday night at E.A. Diddle Arena. The win was Denver's first in five trips to Bowling Green and moves the Pioneers' record to a perfect 3-0 in conference play. WKU falls 5-9 overall and 0-2 in the conference with the loss.

Sergio Kerusch and Juan Pattillo each had double-doubles to lead WKU in the contest. Pattillo tied a career-high with 24 points and grabbed 11 rebounds, and Kerusch added 13 and 12 boards, including seven on the offensive end. Brian Stafford had 17 points to lead Denver, and Travis Hallam had 15. Chase Hallam contributed 11 points and a team-high nine rebounds. The Pioneers shot 56.7 percent in the first half and 51.0 percent for the game, while WKU scored at a 45.3 percent clip.

Denver took a 17-point lead into the locker room at halftime after going 17-for-30 from the field in the opening 20 minutes. Stafford had 12 points in the first half alone and connected on two three-pointers. The Pioneers opened it up to 18 points after a Tyler Thalken layup with 18:04 remaining in the game, before WKU began to chip away.

A quick 6-0 Hilltopper run had the Pioneer lead down to 12, and after two more Denver baskets the Hilltoppers showed life with a 10-0 dash to make the score 48-38 with 9:42 to play. In that 10-0 scoring run, Kerusch and Pattillo each had four points.

Denver distanced themselves a little bit and got the lead back to double-digits, before WKU found the energy for one final push to the end of the game. Trailing by 10 points with just under two minutes to go, Pattillo hit two shots and Kahlil McDonald drained a three-pointer to bring WKU within three at 59-56 with 51 seconds showing on the clock.

Complete Recap

Northern Kentucky Crushes Rockhurst


Northern Kentucky 77
Rockhurst 61

Final from Highland Heights, Kentucky


HIGHLAND HEIGHTS, Ky. - Northern Kentucky University jumped out to a 14-4 lead in the opening three minutes of the game and cruised to a 77-61 victory over Rockhurst on Thursday night.

Corey Sorrell scored 17 points for NKU, which improved to 10-3 overall, 3-2 in the Great Lakes Valley Conference. Sorrell, a sophomore forward from Holy Cross High School, netted 13 points in the second half as NKU coasted past the visiting Hawks.

NKU shot 54 percent from the field and held Rockhurst to just 35.6 percent shooting. Rockhurst dropped to 4-9 overall, 2-3 in the GLVC. NKU now holds a 7-1 lead in the all-time series against Rockhurst.

Erik Stenger slammed down a pair of dunks in the first two minutes as NKU bolted out to a 6-0 lead. Rockhurst battled back with four straight points, but the Norse received a pair of free throws from Stenger and consecutive 3-pointers by Malcolm Eleby and Dennis Gagai to build a 14-4 lead.

Complete Recap

UK is the Team to Beat in the "Dramatic" SEC


Dana O'Neil of ESPN.com has broken down the Southeastern Conference and chosen Kentucky as the team to beat.

O'Neil also picks UK's Brandon Knight as the Player of the year and "someone from Kentucky" as the Rookie of the year.

In addition, she labels Josh Harrellson as the league's Early surprise.

Here is an excerpt:

Team to beat: Kentucky

Player of the year: Brandon Knight

For now. Good all season, the Kentucky freshman is starting to become phenomenal, showing why he was such a highly recruited player. Knight is scoring at an 18-point-a-night clip, but also has cut down his turnovers and upped his assists. He will likely be the best player on the best team in the conference and that's usually the guy who wins the honors.

But … Chris Warren and Trey Thompkins, two guys whose teams would be lost in the water without them, could make things interesting (see below for more on them).

Rookie of the year: Someone from Kentucky

Could be Terrence Jones, could be Doron Lamb, could be Brandon Knight sweeping both awards. All are worthy candidates right now. It's just a matter of who pushes to the front of the Cats' bumper crop by season's end.

Early surprise: Josh Harrellson

Since August the entire commonwealth of Kentucky has had but one mission: to Free Enes. Desperate for a post presence, Cat fans have begun a grassroots mission to beg the NCAA to clear the Turkish big man.

But while the NCAA dithers on Kanter's status, Harrellson has been an absolute revelation. The senior is averaging 7.1 points and 9.4 rebounds per game, rock solid numbers for anyone. That Harrellson averaged 1.3 and 1.2 last season as he cooled his heels behind DeMarcus Cousins makes his production downright eye-popping.

There's no doubt that Kanter, a lottery pick regardless whether he ever suits up in a college uniform, would make a very good Kentucky team even better, but Harrellson's steady, reliable play has been a fantastic substitute.

Complete Article

Pikeville College Grabs Road Win at Campbellsville


Pikeville College 87
Campbellsville 76

Final from Campbellsville, Kentucky


CAMPBELLSVILLE, Ky. – Senior Vance Cooksey had 26 points and 11 rebounds to lead Pikeville College to an 87-76 win over Campbellsville University in Mid-South Conference play Thursday night.

Cooksey, a 6-0 point guard, led fie Bears in double figures and helped the guests to a 44-39 edge on the glass in getting the important conference road win.

Pikeville improved to 14-3 on the season, stretching its win streak to four. Campbellsville lost its second straight and fell to 9-6 overall. Both teams are now 3-2 in the league.

The Bears jumped out to an early lead and were never headed, leading by as many as 18 points twice in the first half before they settled with a 44-29 edge. The second half saw the Tigers outscore the Bears by four, but could get no closer than three, 62-59, on a free throw by Caleb Harris with 6:01 to play.

But senior Chris Donald, the current Mid-South Conference player of the week, hit two free throws to right the ship as the Bears pulled away, thanks largely to solid free throw shooting. They were 20-of-25 (80 percent) from the line in the second half.

Complete Article

Jodie Meeks is Currently Struggling in Philadelphia


Former Kentucky scoring machine Jodie Meeks is in a major slump for the Philadelphia 76ers. Meeks has hit just 25 of his last 90 shots from the field and has only scored in double figures twice in his last nine games.

When Meeks entered the starting lineup, he went through a five-stretch of averaging 16.2 points per game and the 76ers started winning games. Since that time, however, Meeks has averaged just 8.8 points through nine games.

Philadelphia coach Doug Collins has hinted that Meeks may return to a reserve role.

"Jodie's at his best coming off the bench and giving you that juice off the bench against that second-line player," Collins said. "That's no disrespect to him. That's his best role."

Here is an excerpt about Meeks' struggles from Philly.com:

Then, after six pretty successful starts in which Meeks averaged 15 points and the Sixers won four games, teams "put Jodie Meeks on the scouting report," as Collins likes to say. He means that Meeks no longer can run down the court without getting noticed. No longer can he come off a pick or two with just his man paying attention. No longer are there open jump shots. And because of it, Meeks isn't an effective starting "two" guard right now.

Meeks has scored in double figures only twice in his last 11 starts, averaging only 7.8 points. Worse, he isn't getting many shot attempts anymore, averaging only 3.5 in his last four games. It really is somewhat amazing that Collins has gotten his team to win five of its past 11 games with the lack of contribution he's gotten from his "two" guard.

Take a look at the starting "two" guards on the Eastern Conference teams in the playoff hunt: Ray Allen in Boston, Dwyane Wade in Miami, Jason Richardson in Orlando, Joe Johnson in Atlanta. Even Indiana's Mike Dunleavy and New York rookie Landry Fields are outside threats for their teams. All seemingly are way ahead of the Sixers.

Complete Article

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Strong Bench Play Leads Morehead State to Victory


Morehead State 76
Tennessee Tech 64

Final from Morehead, Kentucky

MOREHEAD, Ky.—Morehead State’s bench picked a good time to have a productive night.

The Eagles got 20 bench points to help spur a late run and hold off a pesky Tennessee Tech team, beating the Golden Eagles 76-64 Thursday night in an OVC at Johnson Arena.

The win was MSU’s 23 straight win overall and 21st consecutive victory in OVC games. Those streaks rank the Eagles (10-6; 3-2 OVC) fifth and seventh overall in the nation. Tennessee Tech (6-7, 2-2 OVC) lost to Morehead State for the seventh straight time.

Four of the five MSU starters scored in double digits, led by Kenneth Faried’s 20 points and 13 rebounds. But it was key second-half plays by the MSU bench that helped ignite a late run and push MSU into a double-digit lead. Drew Kelly and Lamont Austin each had a career-high seven points. Arthur McMillan added six in the first half to help the Eagles recover from a quick start by the TTU offense.

“This was the best game for our bench,” Coach Donnie Tyndall said. "Lamont Austin is getting better and better. I thought he played really well. And then Drew Kelly, this was his best game so far. He’s just five games into his career. We know Drew’s going to be a very good player. Arthur McMillan was good the first half. He really played well, but got in a little foul trouble, which limited his minutes.”

The TTU quick start resulted in Tech scoring the games’ first nine points, seven of those from Jud Dillard. But Morehead State countered, scoring the next 19 points, including six on three quick lay-ups by freshman Arthur McMillan. Hill added eight of those points, six on a pair of 3-pointers. Turning the first half into a series of runs, TTU then ran off eight points to pull within two at 19-17.

The runs ended there and the game turned into a more back and forth-affair. The Golden Eagles tied it at 21, but never regained the lead and MSU went into halftime with a 32-28 lead. Hill appeared to hit a buzzer-beating triple just as time expired, but the officials looked at the replay and determined Hill did not get the shot off before the horn sounded.

Complete Recap

Three Former Wildcats are on the NBA "Rookie Ladder"


Three former Kentucky stars are currently on NBA.com's Rookie Ladder. The Rookie Ladder is described as "a free-flowing, constantly updated chart that ranks the 2010-11 rookies."

Currently, DeMarcus Cousins has moved up to No. 2 on the list, behind Blake Griffin. Landry Fields is at No. 3, followed by former Wildcat John Wall. Patrick Patterson has moved into the rankings for the first time as he enters at No. 10.

Here are excerpts about the former Wildcats:

2 DeMarcus Cousins: Sacramento KingsCousins has been nearly unstoppable lately, and the Kings are finding success when they center their offense around him. Against the Suns on Sunday, Cousins scored 13 of his career-high 28 points in the fourth quarter to help Sacramento rally from a 14-point deficit for the 94-89 win. On Tuesday, he nearly led the Kings back from another deficit, scoring 24 points with seven rebounds, and forced Larry Drew to bring his starters back to close out the game. In his last four games, Cousins is averaging 22.3 points and 9.8 rebounds. "He wants to win," teammate Omri Casspi said. "That's it. He just wants to win. He is competitive; he's a great guy and a great teammate. He wants to win so bad."
-- Jan. 5, 2:35 a.m. ET

4 John Wall: Washington WizardsWall's slipping this week is more due to Cousins bumping everyone than Wall's play. Wall is starting to find his groove, and he should climb as he gets more comfortable. In his last four games, the point guard averaged 15.0 points and 8.0 rebounds and had his first matchup with Hornets point Chris Paul. Wall had 12 points and 10 assists and almost had a triple-double -- with eight turnovers. In fact, in his last two games (both losses), Wall has 15 turnovers to 14 assists. On Wall's matchup with Paul, coach Flip Saunders said, "You could see the difference between an established point guard and a young one. When things got a little haywire for them, [Paul] took control of it. When things got haywire for us, we tried to speed up things."
-- Jan. 4, 9:45 p.m. ET

10 Patrick Patterson: Houston Rockets I left the Las Vegas Summer League high on Patterson. He was a guy who worked hard, had an NBA-ready body, knocked down the midrange shot and played defense. So I was a little surprised to see him languish on the bench early in the season. Patterson was shipped to the D-League (where he played nine games), but with injuries to Yao Ming and, most recently, Chuch Hayes, Patterson is finally getting minutes. And he looks like the real deal. In his first extended minutes, the UK product had a double-double, and he's averaging 8.7 points and 7.7 rebounds in his last three games. "Of all of our bigs playing, he's probably the best team defender we have," coach Rick Adelman said. "He really understands where he should be, when he should be. I think he's ahead of other guys."
-- Jan. 4, 8:30 p.m. ET

Complete Article

Former Kentucky Mr. Basketball Domonic Tilford Arrested


Former Kentucky Mr. Basketball Domonic Tilford has been arrested in Clarksville, Indiana and charged with possession of cocaine.

For Tilford, who played at Jeffersontown High School and won Mr. Basketball in 2005, it is the third time he has been arrested on cocaine-related charges.

Here is an excerpt from WLKY.com:

WLKY has confirmed Domonic Tilford, 23, is in police custody in Clark County on charges of possession of cocaine.

Detectives with the Clark County Sheriff's Department said that Tilford and Tierra Warrick, 27, were arrested after an undercover drug buy at a Charlestown hospital.

Tilford was charged with dealing cocaine over three grams, a class A felony, and possession of cocaine over three grams, a class C felony. He is currently incarcerated without bond.

Warrick was the driver and is charged with assisting a criminal, a class D felony. She is currently incarcerated with a $5,000 cash/surety bond.

Complete Article

Union College Wins AAC Opener Over Virginia Intermont


Union College 93
Virginia Intermont 89

Final from Bristol, Virginia

BRISTOL, Va. -- Turrell Morris scored team-high 25 points to lead the way, as the Union men's basketball team fought off a furious comeback bid by Virginia Intermont on Thursday night to take a 93-89 victory.

The game was the Appalachian Athletic Conference season opener for both squads.

With the win, the Bulldogs improved to 7-8 overall, 1-0 in the AAC, while Virginia Intermont fell to 5-10 and 0-1 in the AAC.

In the first half, Union and VIC went into he half deadlocked at 42 apiece. At the start of the second half, the Bulldogs raced out to a large lead that they did not relinquish the rest of the game.

Virginia Intermont, however, made a strong comeback over the final minutes of the contest and had a chance to tie the game at 91 apiece in the final moments of the contest. But, VIC's Joshua Hart was called for an offensive foul with nine seconds left to turn the ball back over to Union. Bulldog James Strange (Pineville, Ky.) then clinched the game for Union by making two free throws with three seconds left to give Union a win in their conference opener.

Complete Recap

Eastern Kentucky Holds Off Jacksonville State


Eastern Kentucky 64
Jacksonville State 61

Final from Richmond, Kentucky


RICHMOND, Ky. – Junior Joshua Jones poured in a season-high 21 points and converted a pair of clutch free throws with nine seconds on the clock as the Eastern Kentucky University men’s basketball team held on to defeat Jacksonville State, 64-61, Thursday night in McBrayer Arena.

EKU (7-8, 2-3 OVC) took its largest lead over JSU (2-13, 0-4 OVC) with 13:03 left in the game, 48-37. The Gamecocks, however, slowly clawed back and cut the lead to one, 62-61, when Sean Thurston laid it in with 39 seconds on the clock. Jones was fouled on EKU’s ensuing possession and made both free throws, and Stephen Hall’s desperation three-pointer at the buzzer fell short allowing the Colonels to earn an important conference victory.

Jones’ 21 points were the second-most in his career. The veteran point guard also committed zero turnovers. Senior Justin Stommes knocked down three three-pointers to finish the night with 13 points, while three other Colonel starters – seniors Spencer Perrin and Josh Daniel and sophomore Willie Cruz – scored eight points apiece.

Nick Murphy led JSU with 20 points and Hall chipped in with 12 points and 10 rebounds.

Complete Recap

Chris Lofton Drops 30 in D-League Win


Former Kentucky Mr. Basketball Chris Lofton led Iowa to a 124-109 victory over Reno in the NBA Development League last night.

Lofton led all scorers with 30 points on 9-16 shooting. He was 7-12 from the 3-point line and 5-6 from the free throw line. The former Mason County star also had 7 rebounds, 4 assists and 4 steals.

On the season, Lofton is averaging 14.1 points, 3.6 rebounds and 1.6 assists. He has topped the 20-point mark five times on the season, but 30 is a new season-high.

Photo: NBA.com

Calipari Says He's Working on Depth



Kentucky coach John Calipari says on Lexy that he is working his team hard and focusing on building depth. In particular, he is working extra minutes with Eloy Vargas, Stacey Poole, Jon Hood and Jarrod Polson:

Tipton: Kanter Case Could Parallel Derrick Rose at Memphis


Jerry Tipton of the Lexington Herald-Leader warns that the Enes Kanter case could theoretically lead to a situation similar to the Derrick Rose fiasco at Memphis.

Tipton also notes that the appeal is expected to be denied.

Here is an excerpt:

Should the appeal be denied, as expected, will Kanter’s family seek a restraining order or temporary injunction, either of which might stall the NCAA ruling and permit Kanter to play.

If that happens, UK would find itself in about the same position as Memphis in the Derrick Rose situation. Rose played, but Memphis ultimately had to vacate its victories and money gained from participation in the NCAA Tournament. If the NCAA prevails in the courts, UK would face the possibility of vacating any victory Kanter was part of.


Complete Article

Murray State's Jeff Reese to Transfer


Murray State junior Jeff Reese is leaving the team and will transfer to Arkansas Tech.

Here is an excerpt from WPSDLocal6.com:

Murray State men’s basketball coach Billy Kennedy announced Jeff Reese is leaving the team to transfer to Arkansas Tech in Russellville, Ark.

“We wish Jeff the best, he’s a good kid,” Kennedy said. “He’ll have a great future at Arkansas Tech.”

UK Fans in Birmingham Can Watch Basketball Game


Here is some broadcast information for Kentucky vs. Georgia on Saturday (via UKAthletics.com):

LEXINGTON, KY – UK fans traveling to Birmingham, Ala. for Saturday’s BBVA Compass Bowl will still be able to tune in and follow the Kentucky-Georgia men’s basketball game.

The UK-UGA men’s basketball game will be live on WABM-TV in Birmingham on Saturday.

The Wildcats and Bulldogs are scheduled for a 4:00 p.m. ET tip and will be televised live on the SEC Network.

Kentucky and Pitt are scheduled to kick-off Saturday’s BBVA Compass Bowl in Birmingham’s historic Legion Field at noon ET. The game will be televised live on ESPN.

She's Back, Pitino's Extorter Requests New Trial


Karen Cunagin Sypher, who was convicted of trying to extort Louisville basketball coach Rick Pitino, is asking a federal judge for a new trial and to allow an outside examination of evidence in her case.

Here is an excerpt form ESPN.com:

Karen Cunagin Sypher's new legal team filed the request late Wednesday night, saying Pitino, prosecutors and businesses in Louisville "worked to ensure they destroy" Sypher, who accused Pitino of forcing her to have sex in a restaurant in 2003. Pitino was never charged.

Sypher is also requesting that audio tapes and photographs used at her trial be examined by reviewers of her choice.

Complete Article

My Thoughts: I thought Sypher's 15 seconds of fame ended last summer, but she's back.

Kanter's Father: "...there has never been any monetary exchange between Enes and Fenerbahce”


Mike DeCourcy of SportingNews.com says the NCAA eligibility appeal hearing for Kentucky freshman Enes Kanter was scheduled to be at 2:00 p.m. ET this afternoon.

DeCourcy shared e-mails with Kanter's father in December.

Here is an excerpt:

“I been saying from beginning of the review there has never been any monetary exchange between Enes and Fenerbahce,” Mehmet Kanter said in an e-mail to Sporting News. “Enes was 16 years old, never had any knowledge about any accounts and everything has been between me and Fenerbahce.”

Complete Article

Rajon Rondo Graces the Cover of SLAM Magazine


Boston point guard Rajon Rondo is on the cover of the latest SLAM Magazine.

Here is an excerpt about Rondo's feature article:

We talked about his prep days—“In HS I pretty much dominated bball in Kentucky. I mean, you know, not that I got all types of records or anything but I challenged myself everyday.” (We both laughed after he said “dominated”, that’s why he backtracked a little.)

His time at the university of Kentucky—“My proudest moments at Kentucky? I don’t have just one but I appreciate the relationships I had with the other guys. We really had a lot fun playing bball but off the court we had great times…guys like Randolph Morris, Joe Crawford, Patrick Sparks, all those guys.”

And what it’s like to be a leader of a team with this much personality—“I don’t think you have to have great camaraderie to win a championship but it helps a lot to get along. You don’t have to do these things but we go out to eat together, we go to the mall together, just little things we do off the court. Every different city we go places together. We play cards together, we don’t gamble though (again we both but out laughing after his gambling clarification. He says everything with sort of a deadpan delivery, so for a microsecond you’re not sure he’s joking but then he laughs so it’s obvious. I get the sense that Rondo is aware of his quiet rep and though it doesn’t bother him, he wants people to know that he can be funny when he wants to be), we just do fun things on the plane. We all understand each other and we come from similar backgrounds. Its like being with your brothers.”

Complete Article

Jones, Faried on Wooden Award Midseason Top 30 List


Kentucky freshman Terrence Jones and Morehead State senior Kenneth Faried are on the John R. Wooden Award Midseason Top 30 watch list.

Jones joins Ohio State's Jared Sullinger as the only freshmen in the nation who are on the midseason list.

The Wooden Award Midseason Top 30 List:

Marshon Brooks, Providence
Alec Burks, Colorado
Malcolm Delaney, Virginia Tech
Marcus Denmon, Missouri
LaceDarius Dunn, Baylor
Kenneth Faried, Morehead State
Jimmer Fredette, BYU
Austin Freeman, Georgetown
Jordan Hamilton, Texas
Matt Howard, Butler
Reggie Jackson, BC
Rick Jackson, Syracuse
JaJuan Johnson, Purdue
Terrence Jones, Kentucky
Kawhi Leonard, San Diego State
Jon Leuer, Wisconsin
Demetri McCamey, Illinois
E’Twaun Moore, Purdue
Marcus Morris, Kansas
Jacob Pullen, Kansas State
John Shurna, Northwestern
Kyle Singler, Duke
Nolan Smith, Duke
Jared Sullinger, Ohio State
Isaiah Thomas, Washington
Klay Thompson, Washington State
Kemba Walker, UConn
Brad Wanamaker, Pittsburgh
Derrick Williams, Arizona
Jordan Williams, Maryland

Report: NCAA Has Ruled Against Kanter Three Times


There are reports leaking out today that the NCAA has actually ruled against Enes Kanter and Kentucky three times already. Only one of those decisions was made public.

The final decision on Kanter's college eligibility is expected sometime between this afternoon and Monday.

Apparently, the NCAA ruled against Kanter initially and also denied his original appeal. UK then opted to use the Cam Newton ruling to open a new case. It now appears that the NCAA has denied that initial case, as well, leaving Kanter's hopes on today's appeal.

Here are some posts from The Bylaw Blog on Twitter:

bylawblog Only one of the three decisions that have been made has been announced by the NCAA. If you announce the first one, have to do updates.

bylawblog I'm not an all or nothing transparency guy, but the NCAA has botched it on the Kanter case

My Thoughts: It's hard to imagine that the NCAA is going to change its ruling after denying Kanter three times. That being said, Free Enes.

Transylvania Comes Up Short at Defiance


Defiance 78
Transylvania 68

Final from Defiance, Ohio

DEFIANCE, Ohio - Transylvania placed four players in double figures Wednesday, but Defiance hung on for a 78-68 win over the Pioneers in men's Heartland Conference basketball play.

Transy is 9-3 overall, 3-2 HCAC, and saw its seven-game winning streak end. The Yellow Jackets are 7-5, 2-3 HCAC.

Pioneer head coach Brian Lane remained one win behind Lee Rose for No. 3 on Transy's all-time win list with 159. The two trail only Don Lane (509) and C.M. Newton (176). Brian Lane is 159-93 in nine plus seasons.

Defiance jumped out to a 20-8 lead in the first half and went up by as many as 14 before the Pioneers mounted a comeback. An 8-2 run to end the half pulled Transy to within four, 38-34, at intermission.

Defiance shot 58 percent from the field in the first half compared to 41 percent for Transy, which got 13 points and five rebounds from Ashley Hatfield. Chris Owens and Brandon Rash each tallied six points in the period. Logan Wolfrum paced the Yellow Jackets with nine first-half points.

The game remained close throughout the second half before the Yellow Jackets used an 8-2 run to end the game with a 10-point margin.

Complete Recap

Former Wildcat Joe Crawford Announces Daughter


Former Kentucky star Joe Crawford is going to be the father of a little girl. Crawford announced on Twitter earlier today:

JoeCrawford5 I'm having a girl. I woke up with all my shoes out the house cuz I hadn't anounced it on twitter yet #BMDRAMA jk lol

And, in case you're expecting a UK Hoops star in the future, Crawford says he'll steer his daughter in a different direction:

JoeCrawford5 Nothings wrong with female ball players but my lil girl aint gone be one. She gotta do somin different my family is basketballed out.

Congrats Joe!

Goodman Confirms: Enes Kanter Appeal is Today


Jeff Goodman of FoxSports.com has confirmed Larry Glover's report from last night that the Enes Kanter NCAA appeal will be heard this afternoon.

Here is an excerpt from Goodman's article:

Kentucky freshman Enes Kanter’s last-ditch appeal to get on the court this season is scheduled for Thursday afternoon.

According to a source close to the situation, FOXSports.com has learned that the Kentucky freshman’s fate should be determined by the NCAA in the day or so following the appeal, which was filed in early December, two days after the NCAA’s decision to allow Auburn quarterback Cam Newton to play in the BCS Championship Game.

Complete Article

Huge Couple of Days in Big Blue Nation


It is very likely that today through early next week will be huge for University of Kentucky fans.

During this period, we should get a decision for 2011 recruit DeAndre Daniels, learn the fate of Enes Kanter, enter Southeastern Conference basketball play and the football team will compete in the BBVA Compass Bowl.

Here is a rundown of what's ahead:

- DeAndre Daniels decision (Today):

According to Dave Telep of ESPN, Daniels will announce his college choice today. Daniels is a multi-talented 6-8 small forward who ranks No. 9 on the Rivals150 for 2011. He is said to be down to Kentucky and Kansas but the overwhelming thought seems to be that he's headed to the Jayhawks.

- Enes Kanter NCAA eligibility hearing (Today):

Larry Glover of WVLK stated last night that the Enes Kanter NCAA hearing will take place today. If that is the case, we will likely receive a decision sometime between late today and Monday.

- BBVA Compass Bowl (Saturday)

A Big Blue Saturday will kickoff (literally) at Noon when Kentucky battles Pitt in the BBVA Compass Bowl. Obviously, this one is big for the football program as Kentucky looks to secure a winning season and end the season with an optimistic outlook.

- SEC Basketball Begins (Saturday)

Almost as soon as the football game ends, the basketball Cats will battle Georgia in Athens. It will be the first SEC game of the season and a tough test for the young Wildcats.

My Good News/Bad News Predictions:

Bad news: Kanter and Daniels

Good news: Football and Basketball both win

Morehead State Hopes to Build on Home Winning Streak


Morehead State University has the fifth-longest active home winning streak in the nation with 22 consecutive wins at Ellis T. Johnson Arena.

The Eagles hope to extend the streak tonight as they host Tennessee Tech at 7:45 in an OVC battle.

Here is an excerpt about MSU's streak from American Chronicle:

With the way his team is currently playing on its home court, Tyndall wants every seat in Ellis T. Johnson Arena filled so that as many eyes as possible can witness another run at success in the Ohio Valley Conference. The Eagles captured the OVC tournament championship two seasons ago.

Morehead State (9-6 overall, 2-2 OVC) owns the fifth-longest active home winning streak in the nation, at 22 games -- three behind Kentucky, which is fourth. Kansas is currently No. 1 with 68 consecutive wins at Phog Allen Fieldhouse.

"It really is amazing," Tyndall said of his team's streak. "It's a credit to our students, faculty and staff on a nightly basis. The community has really rallied around our team. It's made Morehead State a difficult place to come to as an opponent."

Morehead State will try to make it 23 in a row tonight against Tennessee Tech at 7:45.

Complete Article

Enes Kanter May be the Top Center in the 2011 NBA Draft


Kentucky freshman Enes Kanter, who is still waiting word from the NCAA as to whether he'll ever play college basketball, is rated by Hoopsworld.com as the top center prospect for the 2011 NBA Draft.

Here is an excerpt:

1. Enes Kanter, Kentucky – There has been an awful lot of talk about Enes Kanter over the course of the last several months, as he has tried, unsuccessfully, to gain eligibility from the NCAA and begin his freshman season for John Calipari's Kentucky squad. Regardless of if Kanter ever plays a single minute at the college level, there is little doubt that he is a top prospect in the 2011 NBA Draft. Not a particularly explosive athlete, this Turkish big man is similar in playing style to his American counter-part, Jared Sullinger. Kanter has great hands that seemingly inhale the ball like a vacuum. His big frame and outstanding lower body strength allow him to get deep post position from where he is a consistently efficient scorer. The 6-10, 260 lb., Kanter is a capable shooter with his feet set, as well, making him effective as a pick-and-pop player. Defensively, Kanter uses his body and basketball I.Q. to position himself to make plays and come up with the occasional blocked shot. Kanter does a good job of tracking the ball and boxing out his man, pulling down nearly every missed shot in his area. With his size, skill and basketball I.Q., there is little doubt that Kanter will be a top-five pick in June's draft.

Complete Article

Thomas More Defeats Washington & Jefferson


Thomas More College 57
Washington & Jefferson 52

Final from Crestview Hills, Kentucky

(CRESTVIEW HILLS, Ky.) - Senior shooting guard Aaron Miller (Lexington, Ky./Herny Clay) scored a game-high 18 points to lead the Thomas More College men's basketball team to a 57-52 win over Washington & Jefferson College tonight (Wednesday, January 5, 2011) in a President's Athletic Conference (PAC) game at the Connor Convocation Center in Crestview Hills, Kentucky.
With the win, the Saints improve to 7-6 overall and 3-0 in the PAC. With the loss, the Presidents fall to 4-10 overall and 1-3 in the PAC.

The Saints jumped out to an 18-7 lead with 10:42 to play in the opening half when junior shooting guard Todd Krohman (Florence, Ky./Boone County) made a three-pointer. W&J answered with a 6-0 run to cut the lead to 18-17 on a Max Hoster three-pointer with 7:21 to play in the opening half. Thomas More responded with a 9-0 run to extend the lead to 27-17 when freshman point guard D'Carlo Hayes (Louisville, Ky./Male) made two free-throws with 2:25 to play before halftime. The Presidents closed out the game on 6-0 run to cut the lead to 27-23 at halftime when Paul Matthews made a three-pointer with 33-seconds to play in the half.
W&J opened the second half on a 7-3 run capped by a lay-up by Nick Morelli to tie the game at 30-30 with 15:36 to play in the game. The Saints answered with a 14-5 lead to take a 44-35 lead with 8:29 to play in the game when senior shooting guard Brian Muse (Bethel, Ohio/Bethel) made a lay-up. The Presidents responded with a 13-4 run to tie the game at 48-48 with 2:51 to play in the game when Matthews made a lay-up. Thomas More closed out the half on a 9-4 run capped by two-free-throws by freshman point guard Spencer Berlekamp (Cincinnati, Ohio/Kings) with eight-seconds to play in the game for the final score of 57-52.

Complete Recap

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Wildcats Score Well in the Classroom


During the Fall semester, the Kentucky basketball team scored the highest grade point average in John Calipari's three semesters as head coach.

Kentucky totalled a 2.824 GPA, which is dramatically improved from last Fall's 2.025.

Here is an excerpt from the Courier-Journal:

The Wildcats showed continued improvement in the fall, posting a cumulative 2.824 GPA, the highest in Calipari's three semesters as coach.

The GPAs of all UK varsity athletic teams were released to The Courier-Journal on Wednesday in response to an open-records request.

The men's basketball grades represent a dramatic jump from the fall of 2009, when Calipari's first UK team posted a 2.025 GPA, worst among the school's varsity teams that semester.

The men's basketball team improved to 2.18 in the spring semester of 2010.

Complete Article

Louisville Opens Big East Play with Win Over Seton Hall


(23) Louisville 73
Seton Hall 54

Final from Louisville, Kentucky

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Mike Marra and Peyton Siva scored 14 points apiece as Louisville rolled by Seton Hall 73-54 on Wednesday night.

The Cardinals (12-2, 1-0 Big East) shook off a disappointing loss to rival Kentucky on New Year's Eve by burying the Pirates (7-8, 1-2) early. Louisville needed just 10 minutes to build a 22-point lead as the Pirates lost their second straight under an avalanche of missed shots.

Seton Hall shot a season-low 29 percent (18 of 62) from the field and turned it over 14 times. Fuquan Edwin led the Pirates with 18 points and nine rebounds and Jeff Robinson added 14 points, but Seton Hall wasn't competitive when it mattered.

The loss proved to be a bittersweet homecoming for Seton Hall coach Kevin Willard, a former Louisville assistant under Rick Pitino. He exchanged a warm handshake at the buzzer with his mentor and his father Ralph Willard, a member of Pitino's staff.

It was the first act of mercy Pitino showed on his protege. The Cardinals swarmed the Pirates in the lane, holding a 46-35 rebounding advantage and blocking nine shots.

Not bad for a team without a healthy power forward. Both Rakeem Buckles and Jared Swopshire are out with injuries, yet the undersized Cardinals held their own against the Pirates, thanks to contributions from unlikely sources.

Senior center George Goode made his second career start and provided some life, hitting a pair of elbow jumpers in the opening minutes. Little-used sophomore forward Stephan Van Treese, who has drawn Pitino's ire for his inconsistent play, added some toughness on the boards, grabbing a career-high 10 rebounds.

Maybe their productivity stunned the Pirates. Seton Hall missed its first nine shots. By the time Herb Pope ended the drought, the Pirates already trailed 10-2.

Things didn't get much better for Seton Hall. Louisville scored the game's next 14 points, including a pair of 3-pointers by Marra. The sophomore forward was mired in a woeful shooting slump last month before missing two games with a sprained ankle. He came back briefly against Kentucky but was ineffective, missing all three of his shots in 11 minutes.

Complete Recap

Life University Gives No. 3 Georgetown First Loss


Life University 103
(3) Georgetown 96

Final from Marietta, Georgia


MARIETTA, GA. - 1/5/2011 - The Running Eagles are off to a good start in the New Year with a monumental win over (previously) undefeated #3 Georgetown College (Ky.). This is Life's fourth consecutive win against Georgetown.

Life was led by James Hooper with 27 points and 7 rebounds, followed by Tony Reese who scored 22 points and had 7 assists, and PJ Meyers who scored 20 points.

The Tigers' leading scorers were Maurice Pearson with 18 points and Tyrone Shelley with 17 points and 9 rebounds.

Rajon Rondo Dishes Out 22 Assists in Boston Win


Former Kentucky point guard Rajon Rondo led the way as Boston defeated San Antonio 105-103.

Rondo, in only his second game back following an ankle injury, netted a triple-double with 12 points, 10 rebounds and 22 assists. He also added 6 steals.

On the season, Rondo is averaging 10.6 points, 13.6 assists and 2.2 steals. He leads the NBA in assists per game.

NetScouts Basketball Names Faried National Player of the Week


NetScouts Basketball has selected Morehead State's Kenneth Faried as their National Player of the Week for games ending the week of January 2.

Here is an excerpt about Faried:

NetScouts Basketball has selected Morehead State forward Kenneth Faried as our National Player of the Week for games ending the week of Sunday, Jan. 2.

Faried, a 6-8 senior from Newark, NJ., led the Eagles to wins over Kent State, Binghamton and College of Charleston by averaging 22.3 points, 12.7 rebounds and 2.3 blocked shots. In the three games, he shot 29-for-39 (74 percent) from the field and 69 percent (9-for-13) from the foul line.

Faried scored 20 or more points and grabbed 10 or more rebounds in all three games highlighted by a 24-point, 10-rebound performance against Kent State on 10-for-11 shooting from the field. Faried is currently leading the nation in rebounding at 13.8 per game. He has scored 14 or more points in every contest this season while rebounding in double-figures in all but two games. Faried had back-to-back 20-rebound games earlier in the season.

Kentucky at No. 6 in First Official RPI Rankings


The first official RPI rankings have been released and Kentucky sits at No. 6

Amazingly, Georgetown (with 3 losses) tops the list, followed by Kansas, Syracuse, BYU and UConn.

St. John's, Duke, San Diego State and Pittsburgh round out the top 10 after Kentucky.

Louisville is at No. 46.

1. Georgetown
2. Kansas
3. Syracuse
4. BYU
5. UConn
6. Kentucky
7. St. John’s
8. Duke
9. San Diego State
10. Pittsburgh
11. Purdue 12. West Virginia 13. Florida 14. Notre Dame 15. Vanderbilt 16. Central Florida 17. Temple 18. Villanova 19. Ohio State 20. Washington 21. UNLV 22. Old Dominion 23. Miami 24. Cleveland State 25. Boston College

Official RPI Top 68

Thorpe: Cousins Turned Nene, Gasol and Gortat Into Toast


David Thorpe of ESPN.com praised former Kentucky big man DeMarcus Cousins in an article today.

Thorpe said Cousins turned Nene, Marc Gasol and Marcin Gortat into toast during the holiday weekend.

Here is an excerpt:

"Nene, Marc Gasol and Marcin Gortat. Cousins turned those three centers into toast during the holiday weekend, scoring 69 points on 46 shots. And he did it in every way possible. Smash-and-grab buckets in the paint. Sweet post moves. Soft midrange jumpers. He also collected 32 boards (including 16 against Memphis) in those contests. It's possible that for the first time this season, Cousins' teammates realized he's their best talent, and it could mean more late-game touches for the big rookie. In fact, in the Kings' comeback win over Phoenix, Cousins poured in 13 points in the fourth quarter while Tyreke Evans watched from the bench. One thing is certain: Cousins has put together far more good games than bad ones during the past five weeks and is looking like the player we all knew he could be."

John Calipari Answers Questions in Coach Cal's Mailbag for the Week


Coach Cal’s Mailbag: Week of January 3

LIVE Chat with Cal Takes Place Monday, January 31 at noon ET

Click here to view Coach Cal’s Mailbag on FOXSportsSouth.com

FOX Sports South, in conjunction with the University of Kentucky Men’s Basketball Coach John Calipari, presents “Coach Cal’s Mailbag,” an interactive webpage found exclusively on FOXSportsSouth.com.

“Coach Cal’s Mailbag” features Calipari in video responses to reader-submitted questions every week throughout the 2010-11 college basketball season. Readers can submit questions by visiting FOXSportsSouth.com.

In addition to the latest Wildcats basketball news and videos, “Coach Cal’s Mailbag” will also feature live chats with Calipari, the next of which will take place Monday, January 31, at noon ET on FOXSportsSouth.com.

This week in Coach Cal’s Mailbag:

Big win against Louisville. Did Josh Harrellson’s performance take you by surprise? – Brian, St. Louis, MO

Coach Cal – “Josh played well. He’s been playing well. He’s in the best shape of his life. He’s changed habits…He’s doing things he’s never done before, so he’s playing like he’s never played before. We try to tell all our players that if you want some different results, you’ve got to change habits. Josh has. We’re proud of him.”

What is the criteria for getting a basketball on your office wall? – Karen, Danville, KY

Coach Cal – “Beating a ranked opponent will get that ball on the wall…There’s some ranked opponent or some message behind every ball up there.”

Has the potential NBA lockout affected your recruiting strategy? – Collin, New York, NY

Coach Cal – “Not really…My opinion is that the draft will still go on. If you’re a lottery pick, if you’re a first-rounder, you will put your name in the draft. I don’t think it’s going to be as long a lockout as everybody believes.”

What is the toughest loss in your career? How often do you replay the end of the 2008 National Title game in your mind? – Angel, Miami, FL

Coach Cal – “The toughest loss in my career will be the next one. Losing stinks and it rips your heart out. The Kansas game – I only play back all the good stuff…They were a really, really good team…I don’t think it over. I think about the year we had, the players we had on that team. I don’t look back, I look forward.”

What is your number one interest outside of basketball? – Chris, Russell, KY

Coach Cal – “My family – spending time with them. I really enjoy reading. I enjoy history. I enjoy the Military Channel and the History Channel. But when you’re so wrapped up in [basketball], it’s hard to have those interests that take you away from your family more.”

What is it that makes you such a good recruiter? – Don, Denver, CO

Coach Cal – “For me it’s just trying to be truthful and honest, trying to build that trust. We don’t make a whole lot of promises – we make commitments.”

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